Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistically, its not possible in a departmentalized situation to have a conference with both teachers. I do think its a fair expectation that the teacher shares more data points than a MAP score, but a separate conference can be a lot, especially when schools don't allocate the time for it..
How is it logistically impossible? Run the conference with both teachers present. Presumably there are multiple children with the same pair of teachers.
It's not logistically impossible -- it's just not sufficiently resourced.
Let's say that me and my departmentalized party each have 25 kids:
50 students at 15 mins per student is 750 minutes is 12.5 hours without any breaks between conferences. With 5 min breaks in between that's over 16.5 hours, or 2+ teacher work days.
Do you want your kids at home an extra day, day and a half for each student to have time for conferences? Asking sincerely bc that would be how it could be possible logistically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Logistically, its not possible in a departmentalized situation to have a conference with both teachers. I do think its a fair expectation that the teacher shares more data points than a MAP score, but a separate conference can be a lot, especially when schools don't allocate the time for it..
How is it logistically impossible? Run the conference with both teachers present. Presumably there are multiple children with the same pair of teachers.
It's not logistically impossible -- it's just not sufficiently resourced.
Anonymous wrote:Logistically, its not possible in a departmentalized situation to have a conference with both teachers. I do think its a fair expectation that the teacher shares more data points than a MAP score, but a separate conference can be a lot, especially when schools don't allocate the time for it..
Anonymous wrote:I always thought teacher conferences were good to understand whether problems exist. It’s an overview. Teachers are giving updates on anywhere from 25 to 300 kids in a single setting. They can’t possibly give you an in-depth view. For that you need to made a separate meeting. I think you were expecting too much for this type of event.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3rd grade child recently changed schools and her new school started departmentalizing for students in 3rd-5th. So my child does reading in the morning with one teacher and then in the afternoon they do math and science a different teacher. I asked about conferences and was told that the morning teacher would be my child's homeroom teacher and then during conferences we would only meet with the morning teacher the afternoon teacher would offer notes.
Well we just had conferences. The morning teacher offered a lot of work samples and really good insights into how my child is doing in their class. The afternoon teacher did not give any kind of notes and just gave us a printout of my child's MAP scores, which I've already seen. This was just really unhelpful and it was just frustrating that we got literally nothing from the math teacher. I want to contact the math teacher and just find out what's going on and then potentially share with administration just how disappointed I was in this approach to conferences especially since my kid is struggling a bit more in math and I have gotten zero work samples or tests or anything back to understanding why they are struggling
Logistically, its not possible in a departmentalized situation to have a conference with both teachers. I do think its a fair expectation that the teacher shares more data points than a MAP score, but a separate conference can be a lot, especially when schools don't allocate the time for it..
Anonymous wrote:I decided to go ahead and schedule a meeting with her teacher it's just kind of frustrating how poorly this was all set up and I'm trying to withhold judgment until I hear from the other teacher before I decide if I want to complain.
Anonymous wrote:My 3rd grade child recently changed schools and her new school started departmentalizing for students in 3rd-5th. So my child does reading in the morning with one teacher and then in the afternoon they do math and science a different teacher. I asked about conferences and was told that the morning teacher would be my child's homeroom teacher and then during conferences we would only meet with the morning teacher the afternoon teacher would offer notes.
Well we just had conferences. The morning teacher offered a lot of work samples and really good insights into how my child is doing in their class. The afternoon teacher did not give any kind of notes and just gave us a printout of my child's MAP scores, which I've already seen. This was just really unhelpful and it was just frustrating that we got literally nothing from the math teacher. I want to contact the math teacher and just find out what's going on and then potentially share with administration just how disappointed I was in this approach to conferences especially since my kid is struggling a bit more in math and I have gotten zero work samples or tests or anything back to understanding why they are struggling
Anonymous wrote:Just email the math teacher and ask for a separate conference.